Lol but this is actually a good idea. Like how people use washi-tape to add more instrest to their art, you can cut some sandpaper to make the handle of the knife more instresting.
So many artists don't have perfectly smooth lines, i honestly prefer it personally much more over perfect clean lines as it makes the drawing more "organic"
That's actually really interesting. One time when doing a commission, I made a sketch for the "rough draft" of the design, and I show them. They really liked the sketch. But it was just an idea, so when I did the outline, it was in a completely different style. I was trying to go for more corporate look, but they said they liked the sketch. So I drew an outline specifically for the sketch... and then they said "no, like that actual sketch" they just wanted me to clean it up a bit. I couldn't believe it, the sketch was even better than what I first thought it would be.
Happend to me a lot. The sketch often looks better than the end result. Just like the video and your comment, i think it's the stokes and the messy part of it that makes it authentic, so i recently make my drawing looks "messy" when i do the lineart
Sometimes i use the sketch AS the line art! Just colour normally and let it rest on top, and colour the sketch layer as well to fit the drawing, it's really fun! :)
Ooh, this is pretty good. I’ve never thought to do this, since I only really draw on paper for now. I do wanna do digital art one day, so seeing how having similar matching color hues works is great for me in advance. I probably would’ve struggled if I didn’t see this and just tried without understanding how to make color hues match well beforehand. Thanks LavenderTowne! I hope your weekend is going well!
That’s amazing bro!! Hope you get far with your dreams. Maybe one tip is that the hardest thing about digital art is adjusting, in my honest opinion. Having to learn all the tools and commands take a lot of effort for newbies. So at first it may be hard, but with the hang of it. You can create and explore with different styles. High hopes for you!
This is really great. I’d also recommend using clipping masks- they seem scary but a 2 minute tutorial will completely change how you create digital art. Do what makes you happy and play with perspective if you feel as though your art looks to flat. Colour burns and overlays are great. If you wanna learn it, there’s a tutorial.
Them: *has a good line art pen* Me: *aggressively tries to recreate it in IbisPaint* Edit: guys this comment was made months ago I did a buttload of research💀 but thanks for the advice anyways
What I learned is to draw a sketch and erase the messy lines while going over with cleaner lines to make a sketchy line art, it takes away the painful lineart process and makes drawing so much funner, better and easier for me
I did that and I like it but for some reason my brain isn’t happy with it cuz lines need to be “SMOOTH” and “CLEAN” But I like it sketchy I just.. I CANT ALLOW IT
@@pixility5612 i struggle with this when in comes to something i’m drawing looking simple i like simple art it’s just not good enough when i’m drawing it
Same here! I have naturally shakey hands so I often prefer my little chicken scratch, then I just erase all the extra lines. It's really fun to color, especially when the "line art" is kinda see-through, it mixes the colors better for me
I remember having an art book filled with sketches because I was too afraid to do line art because it looked like a TRAIN WRECK 😭 This helped a lot, tysm!
I used to have this problem- it got so bad that with my new sketchbook I commanded myself to always finish my sketches no matter what. What helped me was choosing colour palette in advance to avoid the stress of messing up inking, and investing in some good quality inking pens that make the lineart pop! 🖋️🖋️🖋️
Also, putting a bright bright color underneath everything can help you catch the tiny holes that'll appear when you work with light colors on a white canvas
@@billcipher8645 I think it depends on the piece itself! :) If you're going for darker colors, black may be a bit too dark to see anything but if not then go for it! I tend to use light gray and then habbitually paint the background black or white to catch anything. But tbh, it doesn't really matter much in final piece
Yes yes yes! I tend to use green! Sending WIPs to my friends would usually result in jokes about hurt eyes though, haha. (And eventually got on my nerves, so I still use green but a slightly less bright green.)
dude tinting art (thats what i call putting one color beneath the whole thing, idk if thats what its called or not) is a great way to unify your colors. i consider myself to be a begginer but trust me on this one, tints are _lifesavers_ xD
Oh, I do so love your shorts with tips! "Find a brush that you like" is way harder than it sounds. I feel like I've been struggling for years, and still have no idea. What brushes do you like to use? Are they in Clip Studio asset library?
I know this will sound like a huge time sink, but as someone who’s just recently gotten into digital, I find that doing small little sketches and then lining and coloring those can help!! so, like, draw just the head of a character, duplicate it a few times, and then select a brush, line one, select another, line the next, etc. It’s really hard to tell if the brush will actually work for what you want if you’re just swatching/scribbling with it, as opposed to really lining it. Plus, if it’s all the same sketch, it’s easier to compare the brushes!!
@@eleanormlodecki2383 basically, you add a layer underneath the base colors and fill the drawing in a color of your choice. after that, you lower the opacity on that layer (moderately, not 100%) so that the base colors are visible, yet still blending into the color of the underlay you did. i'm not too good at explaining things, but i hope this helped!
for so long i tried having that "perfect" clean lineart and i switched between thick and thin because ive hated it either way, only to realize that i loved it a bit messier and varying in line thickness, texture, etc! but of course thats just for those of us that do. creating art that YOU love is always a journey and it changes! just have fun w it
Something I recommend for a more interesting line art is to use a pressure sensitive brush so when your line goes down put more pressure on it therefore making a thicker and when your line goes upwards don’t put a lot of pressure, therefore having a thinner line. This is my secret to add depth.
I used to do that when I had a phone thar had a pressure sensitive screen. Now that newer iphones don’t do that anymore (and I draw digitally pretty much only on my phone) I had to adjust my strategy. These days I make multiple passes on my line art. One to capture the information in the sketch, and then the rest to add depth and texture. I’ll kind of sketch over lines and corners I want to thicken so it has a slightly random but fairly consistent thickness in those areas
THE COLOR TRICK!!! ITS WHAT IVE ALWAYS BEEN WANTING BUT COULD NEVER GET QUITE RIGHT!!!! i’ve always just color dodged the crap out of the thing and hoped that would blend them but wow!!!
@@notatallfunctional yes! Erasable colored pencils rock! Also you can use colored pens or inks for the final lineart, or just stick with the colored pencils. For copic proof and water proof, I recommend Dr Ph Martin's Bombay India inks (they come in many colors), Sakura micron pens, copic multiliners, Tombow Fudenosuke, Sharpie Pen (not the ultra fine marker, but the one that says pen on it bc the marker is not alcohol marker proof) and Faber Castell Pitt Artist Pens. All of these will not smudge with watercolors or alcohol based markers, meaning you can color your drawings with wet media.
that the unifying color thing just single-handedly improved all of my sketches because i thought they were trash before. this fixed them greatly thank you.
I literally felt like a god when I "discovered" the multiply and overlay layers as a kid. They became incredibly useful for my scanned sketch and I just toggled the contrast and luminescence.
"Dont be afraid to make your linework a little sketchy" this is something I do. A few years ago I hated doing linework, so I'd end up just coloring sketch. Now, I either refine my final sketch to make it cleaner or draw sketchy/textured linework
I really love this video, I already knew all these tricks and stuff but I also had to figure all those things out myself. I really appreciate this because they are good tips for someone who wouldn’t know or who is new to art.
I love how lavender gives us all these tips (for digital artist w coloring!) she uses to help us improve our art and get it to make them "pop" out more
If you have a heavy hand like I do and struggle to make nice weighted lines, I suggest drawing with a brush without pressure sensitivity, then manually adding weight where you want to express weight or overlap ! (for reference, I often use the gel pen or a less smoothed version of the monoline on procreate at 1% or 2% size). I find that it's easier to edit lines that don't have weight to them, and it helps me be less precious with my lines because it still feels like a sketch.
I do that too!! It takes longer than if I could work with pressure sensitivity, and started as a workaround for me because my new phone doesn’t have a pressure sensitive screen like my old one did, but honestly I like the result so much more.
Out of all the art tips I’ve seen by different artist, yours are by far the best. I think it’s because your tips don’t cater to your specific art style :)
after years of drawing (I'm an amature) I finally figured out that in order to be happy with the final result (or even go for making complete coloured pictures) I should not overthink/overdo the sketch. Helps a lot in everything. Roughly sketching on paper and then layering linework/colours in ps and seeing how it turns cool and neat is just joy
You perfectly summed up what makes sketches so good. They just have so much... personality. I loved all of the tips to bring some of that personality to a final drawing ❤
the tip of adding 1 color underneath actually helped me a ton! I watched this video awhile ago and I've been doing it ever since :) sometimes I'll add 2 or 3 colors though and then blend them, just for some variety
I'm a traditional artist more than a digital artist but I feel that these tips can work for traditional art as well. Instead of a single, unifying color behind with opacity, I could try a very light version of that color over it. I've been trying that a bit lately. Love this short.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, Your advice has saved me so many times, and now it’s like second nature. You are truly a staple in the online art community
I really love these short tutorial videos!! I'm kind of an amateur digital artist, and all of these videos are short, sweet, and to the point (great for my attention span). Super helpful, thanks so much!! ^^
Yeah ive learned covering as much of your sketch as possible, leads to your line art looking just as good as your sketch, there's often alotta small mistakes/thing you like that the scribbliness will cover up/create, so mimicking it in your line art usually leads to a result closer to what you imagined
Ooh that last one really helped. I've heard similar but the artist would lay down the color base first which threw me off trying to choose colors afterwards.
This was really helpful! I'm more used to traditional mediums and am trying to convert to more digital art. Coloring and line art looking really off is a real problem I've been having with my digital art these were Great tips!
It helps me not worry as much about making mistakes by creating a new layer whenever I try something new. If the chance of ruining my artwork is what’s stopping me from leaving my comfort zone then *improvise, adapt, overcome.*
This is amazing advice I've been looking for this for a very long time cuz I wanna be a digital artist at 17 or 18 years old(I'm 15) but sadly I draw with pencils and paper and I'm not that rich to get fancy fine lining ink pens so I have to make do with black gel pens which sadly can't apply these tips to but it's okay I'll keep your tip in mind till I reach my goal thanks alot
imo its also fine to just colour the sketch without the lineart, sometimes the extra lines you might leave out of cleaner lineart add movement or volume to the image, and the lineart is basically just a cleaner sketch anyway. some of the coolest art ive seen has been stuff where they fully left the guideshapes visible and everything, and just went ham on the colouring
Omg your a life saver!! This happens all the time for me. And idk about everyone else but sometimes when I keep hating my final product, I end up having art block *cough* like I do now *cough* Tysm!!
Those sketchy lines you make cause it to look more like there is movement and vividness. And putting colors where they glow in unison just makes it all more vibrant and soul like, causing the viewer to be more absorbed and making the emotion more conveying.
Thank you for the tips! I'm planning on getting a tablet soon and try digital art so your tips really help! You are great at explaining art tips and you give helpful tips as well! Thank you again!
I’ve stopped even doing a lineart layer, I just cleanup my sketch layer and color under that. I usually shade before I color too it’s really satisfying to add color with the shading visible.
"And then slightly lower the opacity"
Me, a traditional artist: *Guess I'll die*
wheeze
kneaded eraser time I guess???
I have a tip :)
Lightly go over your work with a colored pencil with a bright color of your choosing!
Uhh, watercolor wash then color with copics when it dries? Could work, maybe. You'll need to use paper made for watercolor to begin with tho.
Tear the paper in half height wise (the really thin part of the paper). That will lower the opacity by 50%!
I wonder if you could brush it with really really dilute watercolors????
I second all of this. When I stopped trying to make my line art clean, it started looking 1000x better.
Hi Piper!!
Same!
Same! I tried drawing with a different brush with not so clean lineart and it was one of the best drawings I made
Crow Father!
I need to start doing the same
“Add a texture on top”
Me, a traditional arist: ...Dad, where did we put the sandpaper?
XD
Lol but this is actually a good idea. Like how people use washi-tape to add more instrest to their art, you can cut some sandpaper to make the handle of the knife more instresting.
LOL
The struggle is real
i'm dead at this XD
Finally someone says that not having smooth and perfect lineart is also good😭 i personally prefer the wonky lineart lol i dont understand all the hate
So many artists don't have perfectly smooth lines, i honestly prefer it personally much more over perfect clean lines as it makes the drawing more "organic"
keepo (netflix) is even made to look real sketchy too
@@novaria I love kipo's artstyle
Me looking over at Mario Strikers art style:
Ah, yes. A shining example. Splendiferous!
I don't have hate, my brain is just petrified it won't look good *cri*
That's actually really interesting. One time when doing a commission, I made a sketch for the "rough draft" of the design, and I show them. They really liked the sketch. But it was just an idea, so when I did the outline, it was in a completely different style. I was trying to go for more corporate look, but they said they liked the sketch. So I drew an outline specifically for the sketch... and then they said "no, like that actual sketch" they just wanted me to clean it up a bit. I couldn't believe it, the sketch was even better than what I first thought it would be.
*When the sketch is better than the final line artwork:*
It's always like that in my drawing lmao, that's why i never do linearts again
This is why I barely do lineart anymore lol
Happend to me a lot. The sketch often looks better than the end result. Just like the video and your comment, i think it's the stokes and the messy part of it that makes it authentic, so i recently make my drawing looks "messy" when i do the lineart
Sometimes i use the sketch AS the line art! Just colour normally and let it rest on top, and colour the sketch layer as well to fit the drawing, it's really fun! :)
Ooh, this is pretty good. I’ve never thought to do this, since I only really draw on paper for now. I do wanna do digital art one day, so seeing how having similar matching color hues works is great for me in advance. I probably would’ve struggled if I didn’t see this and just tried without understanding how to make color hues match well beforehand. Thanks LavenderTowne! I hope your weekend is going well!
.
That’s amazing bro!! Hope you get far with your dreams. Maybe one tip is that the hardest thing about digital art is adjusting, in my honest opinion. Having to learn all the tools and commands take a lot of effort for newbies. So at first it may be hard, but with the hang of it. You can create and explore with different styles. High hopes for you!
me aswell!
@@ariesarts7867 Period
@@jellyelise394 😂😂😂
This is really great. I’d also recommend using clipping masks- they seem scary but a 2 minute tutorial will completely change how you create digital art. Do what makes you happy and play with perspective if you feel as though your art looks to flat. Colour burns and overlays are great. If you wanna learn it, there’s a tutorial.
what does clipping do?
also which tutorials would you recommend
Clipping masks are fantastic!
I use them for overall shadows and when there is backlit objects
Very helpful lol
What does color burn do?
@@flannelsmurf8579 I don't really understand how clipping works. Do you have a link of an easy to understand way to use them?
Them: *has a good line art pen*
Me: *aggressively tries to recreate it in IbisPaint*
Edit: guys this comment was made months ago I did a buttload of research💀 but thanks for the advice anyways
you and me both girlie 😭😭
@@batfacedliar8922 me too
Same loll
Finally someone who uses ibisplaint
Edit: 69 likes?!?! Sus and amazing!!
I just use my trusty f i n g e r s ✨
Me, an intellectual: *cleans the sketch until it looks fairly like a lineart*
i do that with traditional art. it’s actually easier that way
Me a lazy ass artist
Damn, I do that too
that's what i do
it helps to avoid the jagged ass lineart and looks so much better usually
An intellectual at a video game company: colors over the sketch to clean it :D
What I learned is to draw a sketch and erase the messy lines while going over with cleaner lines to make a sketchy line art, it takes away the painful lineart process and makes drawing so much funner, better and easier for me
I did that and I like it but for some reason my brain isn’t happy with it cuz lines need to be “SMOOTH” and “CLEAN”
But I like it sketchy I just.. I CANT ALLOW IT
@@pixility5612 EXACTLY- with other people's art I adore the sketchy look, but whenever _I_ do it I can't help but despise it (╥_╥)
@@pixility5612 i struggle with this when in comes to something i’m drawing looking simple i like simple art it’s just not good enough when i’m drawing it
Same here! I have naturally shakey hands so I often prefer my little chicken scratch, then I just erase all the extra lines. It's really fun to color, especially when the "line art" is kinda see-through, it mixes the colors better for me
@@grammarnazi3876 IKR LIKE I WANT IT TO LOOK SKETCHY BUT I KEEP TRYING TO PERFECT THE LINES
I don't really do digital art, just sketches on paper, but this video actually makes me feel more confident and gives me some inspiration :)
Me, using flipaclip, violently staring at my four brushes:
Okay
Now what-
I don't suggest flipaclip as a main art program
Hey! What do you draw on? Like do you have a drawing tablet connected to a laptop, an ipad, or just your phone? Because I have a few recommendations 😊
Same lol
upgrade to ibis tf
Don’t use flipaclip for drawing 😩
(Unless you really like it)
I remember having an art book filled with sketches because I was too afraid to do line art because it looked like a TRAIN WRECK 😭
This helped a lot, tysm!
I used to have this problem- it got so bad that with my new sketchbook I commanded myself to always finish my sketches no matter what. What helped me was choosing colour palette in advance to avoid the stress of messing up inking, and investing in some good quality inking pens that make the lineart pop! 🖋️🖋️🖋️
oml i cant agree more lol
@@lofi-lila nice! Also line weight is SUPER important! Make some bits thick some bits small
freall!!
I go through that alot and I screwed up alot of drawings in the past for doing the line art
Also, putting a bright bright color underneath everything can help you catch the tiny holes that'll appear when you work with light colors on a white canvas
Or make a full black background for catching mistakes! It's also better for the eyes
@@billcipher8645 I think it depends on the piece itself! :) If you're going for darker colors, black may be a bit too dark to see anything but if not then go for it! I tend to use light gray and then habbitually paint the background black or white to catch anything. But tbh, it doesn't really matter much in final piece
Good to know I'm not the only person who used to be plagued by those things 😂
Yes yes yes! I tend to use green! Sending WIPs to my friends would usually result in jokes about hurt eyes though, haha. (And eventually got on my nerves, so I still use green but a slightly less bright green.)
I use dark grey shade...cause it hurts my eyes, less.
"are you an artist that tends to love your sketches but then hate the finale product?"
*The finale product coming out like a literal masterpiece*
when she says final product she means how the lineart looks, and tbh before she did her tips it looked very dead. after it looked much better
dude tinting art (thats what i call putting one color beneath the whole thing, idk if thats what its called or not) is a great way to unify your colors. i consider myself to be a begginer but trust me on this one, tints are _lifesavers_ xD
Oh, I do so love your shorts with tips!
"Find a brush that you like" is way harder than it sounds. I feel like I've been struggling for years, and still have no idea.
What brushes do you like to use? Are they in Clip Studio asset library?
Seriously though, it took me FOREVER to find a couple of brushes I could work with.
I know this will sound like a huge time sink, but as someone who’s just recently gotten into digital, I find that doing small little sketches and then lining and coloring those can help!! so, like, draw just the head of a character, duplicate it a few times, and then select a brush, line one, select another, line the next, etc. It’s really hard to tell if the brush will actually work for what you want if you’re just swatching/scribbling with it, as opposed to really lining it. Plus, if it’s all the same sketch, it’s easier to compare the brushes!!
Theres a brush called sol a ytber recommended it so i tried it out its nice not really the same tho
Yes!
I personally make my own brushes just by editing default brushes, I like triangle brushes :))
That underlaying color thing is so wonderfully simple, yet so effective.
How do you do it lmao I'm struggling
@@eleanormlodecki2383 basically, you add a layer underneath the base colors and fill the drawing in a color of your choice. after that, you lower the opacity on that layer (moderately, not 100%) so that the base colors are visible, yet still blending into the color of the underlay you did. i'm not too good at explaining things, but i hope this helped!
@@ellieanator THANK YOU!
just learn color theory it's not hard
This has changed my procreate drawings so much. Went from looking too cartoony to hand drawn master piece.
POV: you’re an artist who works on paper-
I remember when i first figured out that line art didnt need to be perfect and all cleaned up
my love for art skyrocketed haha
Yesss me too!
same!
I need to learn that lmao. I'm such a perfectionist so I came to hate line art. I never finished my actual art because of that smh
i just love the roughness of sketches and the fact that there is no finality to it it’s like there’s a spiritual freedom to the sketch
The opacity one you said is a stroke of genius in my eyes. I’ve never seen it mentioned before, but it seems so valuable as a digital artist
Love the detail and looks and colors🎨
The unifying overlay part is definitely new information for me! Thank you, I'll be sure to try it the next time I'm on my tablet!
Literally the only youtube "shorts?" I watch. Actual advice I cant wait to try out!
This girl is gonna give a tutorial someday of how to draw the Mona Lisa, she really is that good.
Vampire girl whole time:you better draw me good or this blood on this knife about to be yours.
for so long i tried having that "perfect" clean lineart and i switched between thick and thin because ive hated it either way, only to realize that i loved it a bit messier and varying in line thickness, texture, etc!
but of course thats just for those of us that do. creating art that YOU love is always a journey and it changes! just have fun w it
So that's wh sketches mostly look better than the final lineart
Something I recommend for a more interesting line art is to use a pressure sensitive brush so when your line goes down put more pressure on it therefore making a thicker and when your line goes upwards don’t put a lot of pressure, therefore having a thinner line. This is my secret to add depth.
What are some brushes you would recommend?
I used to do that when I had a phone thar had a pressure sensitive screen. Now that newer iphones don’t do that anymore (and I draw digitally pretty much only on my phone) I had to adjust my strategy. These days I make multiple passes on my line art. One to capture the information in the sketch, and then the rest to add depth and texture. I’ll kind of sketch over lines and corners I want to thicken so it has a slightly random but fairly consistent thickness in those areas
People without a Stylus: ;-;
@@damonrouse757 hi sorry for a late reply, I recommend the regular brush pen with the stream line turned off.
@@omgthatsamber8146 there are people who draw without a stylus? 💀✋🏻
For traditional art I usually use a prismacolour pencil to to line art after the sketch as it keeps most of the oringle sketch unlike fineliners
THE COLOR TRICK!!! ITS WHAT IVE ALWAYS BEEN WANTING BUT COULD NEVER GET QUITE RIGHT!!!! i’ve always just color dodged the crap out of the thing and hoped that would blend them but wow!!!
"hope this helped" IMMENSELY, THANK YOU
lavendertowne: “change your lines to a different color”
Me drawing on paper: 🤔
I’d suggest using erasable colored pencils for under sketches.
@@notatallfunctional yes! Erasable colored pencils rock! Also you can use colored pens or inks for the final lineart, or just stick with the colored pencils. For copic proof and water proof, I recommend Dr Ph Martin's Bombay India inks (they come in many colors), Sakura micron pens, copic multiliners, Tombow Fudenosuke, Sharpie Pen (not the ultra fine marker, but the one that says pen on it bc the marker is not alcohol marker proof) and Faber Castell Pitt Artist Pens. All of these will not smudge with watercolors or alcohol based markers, meaning you can color your drawings with wet media.
that the unifying color thing just single-handedly improved all of my sketches because i thought they were trash before. this fixed them greatly thank you.
The underlying layer with opacity was actually really smart!
I literally felt like a god when I "discovered" the multiply and overlay layers as a kid. They became incredibly useful for my scanned sketch and I just toggled the contrast and luminescence.
"Dont be afraid to make your linework a little sketchy" this is something I do. A few years ago I hated doing linework, so I'd end up just coloring sketch. Now, I either refine my final sketch to make it cleaner or draw sketchy/textured linework
Same
I really love this video, I already knew all these tricks and stuff but I also had to figure all those things out myself. I really appreciate this because they are good tips for someone who wouldn’t know or who is new to art.
I love how lavender gives us all these tips (for digital artist w coloring!) she uses to help us improve our art and get it to make them "pop" out more
If you have a heavy hand like I do and struggle to make nice weighted lines, I suggest drawing with a brush without pressure sensitivity, then manually adding weight where you want to express weight or overlap !
(for reference, I often use the gel pen or a less smoothed version of the monoline on procreate at 1% or 2% size).
I find that it's easier to edit lines that don't have weight to them, and it helps me be less precious with my lines because it still feels like a sketch.
I do that too!! It takes longer than if I could work with pressure sensitivity, and started as a workaround for me because my new phone doesn’t have a pressure sensitive screen like my old one did, but honestly I like the result so much more.
i use both.
Out of all the art tips I’ve seen by different artist, yours are by far the best. I think it’s because your tips don’t cater to your specific art style :)
And this is actually easy to do, other artist make... impossible tips sometimes... like "just add detail" how?
after years of drawing (I'm an amature) I finally figured out that in order to be happy with the final result (or even go for making complete coloured pictures) I should not overthink/overdo the sketch. Helps a lot in everything. Roughly sketching on paper and then layering linework/colours in ps and seeing how it turns cool and neat is just joy
You perfectly summed up what makes sketches so good. They just have so much... personality. I loved all of the tips to bring some of that personality to a final drawing ❤
The color underneath is such a simple, seemingly obvious thing I've never thought of before! Definitely going to give it a spin!
Her voice is so calming
And she so nice to give all of these tips 😭❤️
the only art tutorial short I genuinely found instructive. cheers
Thank you so much for this. The color underneath is such a good tip. I’ve never though about it before and am excited to try it.
I actually love sketchy lineart! Your tips help me TREMENDOUSLY! Luv you Haley
the tip of adding 1 color underneath actually helped me a ton! I watched this video awhile ago and I've been doing it ever since :) sometimes I'll add 2 or 3 colors though and then blend them, just for some variety
I would like to say, these tips HELP. I was struggling with coloring and this was just 100% helpful
Wow! Thanks for that color-under-all-the-other colors trick! I’d never heard of that one before and I will definitely implement it in the future!
OML THANK YOU SO MUCH HALEY I NEED THIS IN MY LIFE
i’m i the only one who notices how sweet and comforting her voice is. It just makes me fell so comforted
Could you do a female eye tutorial (with those spikey lashes)? I’ve watched all your shorts and I love your art style, especially the eyes!
I love a good sketch but always have trouble with final product
You have such a great soothing voice 💫✨
Thanks for the amazing advice, too!
I'm a traditional artist more than a digital artist but I feel that these tips can work for traditional art as well. Instead of a single, unifying color behind with opacity, I could try a very light version of that color over it. I've been trying that a bit lately. Love this short.
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again,
Your advice has saved me so many times, and now it’s like second nature. You are truly a staple in the online art community
I really love these short tutorial videos!! I'm kind of an amateur digital artist, and all of these videos are short, sweet, and to the point (great for my attention span). Super helpful, thanks so much!! ^^
Yeah ive learned covering as much of your sketch as possible, leads to your line art looking just as good as your sketch, there's often alotta small mistakes/thing you like that the scribbliness will cover up/create, so mimicking it in your line art usually leads to a result closer to what you imagined
Sketches have so much energy
I can't express how much this helped me. Thank you so much 😭
I'm just getting into digital art and this really helped, thank you!
Thank you for the amazing tips I’ve been trying to improve my art so know I go to start that you so much
Ooh that last one really helped. I've heard similar but the artist would lay down the color base first which threw me off trying to choose colors afterwards.
This was really helpful! I'm more used to traditional mediums and am trying to convert to more digital art. Coloring and line art looking really off is a real problem I've been having with my digital art these were Great tips!
thank you! im using these tips rn and looks like a drawing from someone else, it really works!
Thank you so much for the tip, I tend to like my sketch then the final outline. 😁
It helps me not worry as much about making mistakes by creating a new layer whenever I try something new. If the chance of ruining my artwork is what’s stopping me from leaving my comfort zone then *improvise, adapt, overcome.*
these tips were GAME CHANGERS for me, thank you so much
This is amazing advice I've been looking for this for a very long time cuz I wanna be a digital artist at 17 or 18 years old(I'm 15) but sadly I draw with pencils and paper and I'm not that rich to get fancy fine lining ink pens so I have to make do with black gel pens which sadly can't apply these tips to but it's okay I'll keep your tip in mind till I reach my goal thanks alot
You’re a lifesaver, my drawings haven’t been looking good lately and I feel like this is going to help
These are some really good tips 👌
Thank you 🙏
I entirely agree with the sketchy final lineart part! thats just a part of my art style, my finals have a slight sketchy look still to them
imo its also fine to just colour the sketch without the lineart, sometimes the extra lines you might leave out of cleaner lineart add movement or volume to the image, and the lineart is basically just a cleaner sketch anyway. some of the coolest art ive seen has been stuff where they fully left the guideshapes visible and everything, and just went ham on the colouring
Omg your a life saver!! This happens all the time for me. And idk about everyone else but sometimes when I keep hating my final product, I end up having art block *cough* like I do now *cough* Tysm!!
Such a wonderous difference ❤
Those sketchy lines you make cause it to look more like there is movement and vividness. And putting colors where they glow in unison just makes it all more vibrant and soul like, causing the viewer to be more absorbed and making the emotion more conveying.
Yay I'm early for once
samee
Can you do a tut on how to draw people In different poses-?
i do this now because of this video! my line art looks 10x better now because it has that detail in it. thank you!
I swear people that are left handed have the best art skills. My friend is left handed and is SO GOOD at drawing, I wanna draw like that😭👌
Thank you for the tips!
I'm planning on getting a tablet soon and try digital art so your tips really help! You are great at explaining art tips and you give helpful tips as well! Thank you again!
Me drawing on a piece of paper:
"Guess I'll just pass away"
Wow the color layer at the end is smart idk how I never thought of that !! Thank you so much
The layering of another colour underneath was a true mindblown moment for me
wow this relay helps, I have never seen this advise before.😮😀
thank you for two likes
That tip about making your colours more harmonious is pretty cool! Definitely gunna have to try this at some point.
Omg, thanks so much for this. I tend to like a sketch and then hate the line art so this is really helpful!
I don't think you understand how helpful this is. Tysm.
The color tip is actually genius!! Thank YOUU!!💜💜
That main color opacity to blend them sounds really helpful!
Ooh thank you i love to draw Anime Arts but i will try this!!!
Absolutely life saving!! Thank you!!
I’ve stopped even doing a lineart layer, I just cleanup my sketch layer and color under that.
I usually shade before I color too it’s really satisfying to add color with the shading visible.
Learned a ton from such a short video, thanks for the tips!
That unified color on top tip is really good I like that and wanna use it :>
Pretty!
that helped so much, thank you!!! 🥰